Middle East Oil Shock Triggers $50B Asian Equity Outflows and $1B Thai Bond Selloff
Foreign investors are rapidly exiting Asian risk assets as an oil shock tied to escalating Middle East tensions worsens energy supply expectations and economic outlooks. The report cites net $50.45 billion of foreign equity selling in March—its largest since 2008—across key Asian markets. Fixed income is also under pressure: Thailand’s bond market is seeing more than $1 billion of foreign outflows in March, the biggest selloff since 2022. The shared driver is a risk-off shift away from emerging markets as oil-price volatility feeds into inflation and growth fears, raising risk premia and tightening funding conditions.
Geopolitical Implications
- 01
Escalating Middle East tensions are transmitting immediately into Asian financial stress through energy-price risk.
- 02
The magnitude of outflows suggests investors view the oil shock as persistent rather than temporary.
- 03
Tighter funding conditions in emerging markets may amplify macro volatility if tensions continue.
Key Signals
- —Foreign flow data for Asia equities and Thailand bonds
- —Oil price volatility and inflation/growth expectations in Asia
- —Thai FX and local yield moves as early indicators
- —EM risk indices for contagion confirmation
Topics & Keywords
Related Intelligence
Full Access
Unlock Full Intelligence Access
Real-time alerts, detailed threat assessments, entity networks, market correlations, AI briefings, and interactive maps.